The Ghost of Form: An Interview with Anna Lena Phillips Bell
by Hope Fischbach泭
泭 泭泭
Hope Fischbach: Could you share with us a glimpse of your writing process for泭Smaller Songs?
Anna Lena Phillips Bell: A few years ago I bought a copy of泭English and Scottish Ballads泭at the beloved, now gone, Bookshop of Chapel Hill. (Side note: boycott Amazon!) I picked up the book because it was appealinga pink cover with a swanand because I do love a ballad, and because the footnotes, written by Robert Graves, who had edited the collection, were sparse but entertaining. Over the course of a long winter, I transcribed the footnotes onto little cards, and then sorted the words within them alphabetically so that I had a word bank. As I worked, they seemed to want to coalesce into phrases, and those phrases tended toward the little poems that make up泭Smaller Songs. I did a lot of cutting up and moving around of the little units of verse, so the project is a collage, of a kind.
HF: How does the history ofand your subversion ofEnglish and Scottish ballads intertwine with Appalachian music and culture? Could you tell us more about the relationship between泭泭and泭, your first book?
ALPB: A lot of泭Ornament泭is in conversation with old-time songs and tunes, including a few ballads. I began making the poems that became泭Smaller Songs泭partly in irritation at some of the strictures and tropes of the ballads reprinted in泭English and Scottish Ballads, and at Gravess interpretations of themand partly in pure glee at the language I found there.
HF: In Issue 28 of泭Ecotone,泭your introduction The Work of Love states, One of my great loves, and one of this magazines abiding concerns, is print culturethe way editing, design, and materials can come together to make enduring text objects. Its clear that a similar concern presided over the design of泭Smaller Songs, consistent with your love for the craft of books. Can you tell us more about the choices for the chapbooks physical design (the woodcuts, color, type, and material)?
ALPB: I feel really fortunate that泭Smaller Songs泭has a home with St Brigid Press, which helped the book find its life as an object. Emily Hancock, the publisher, has a fantastic sensibility, and I love her values as a printer. Our conversations about trim size and cover paper and interior type and sewing were so much fun. We had talked about finding a few illustrations for the book, and around that time I happened to be calling a New Years Eve square dance, for which my friend Molly Stouten was playing fiddle. Molly has a long practice as a visual artist and a book artist, and on a New Years Day walk, she offered to make woodcuts for the frontispiece and section headings. I love the feeling she captures in each of them, and the way Emily incorporated them into the book.
HF:泭How does your experience as a square-dance caller influence your perception of music and movement in poetry? Is there a kinesthetic element to your writing practice?
ALPB: What a fantastic question. My poetic practices and my movement practices feel like part of the same continuum. There is something pleasing to me about the structure of a square dancethat the dancers collectively make these patterns with their bodies. Something thats important to me as a caller, and as a person in a body generally, is finding freedom from thinking of gender as binary, and from the unwanted associations that come with that binary. Its why I call almost all the dances I know without reference to gender. Square dancing, like the old-time music that often accompanies it, has oppression in its history; like old-time, it also has joy, and complexity, and weirdness, and its particular joys and weirdnesses are things I love deeply. In thinking about poetic form, too, I think of the ways meter and form were used to carry on the status quo, but also of the ways meter and form feel in my body, ways I find them useful now.泭
The pleasure I take in square dancing is probably the same pleasure I take in writing poems in fixed formsa structure that feels very physical. Poems, especially patterned ones, become part of our bodies when we express them physically. They become part of us and they change us. Even the poems that make up泭Smaller Songs泭have the ghost of a stanzaic form, and of ballad meter, in them.
HF:泭Could you discuss the significance of the garden, the knife, and the inner room as thematic elements?
ALPB: As I revised, I found the poems coalescing around those three broad ideasof growing and nourishment and the household; of violence, specifically violence done by men; and of the inner spaces, both physical and psychic or emotional, that women and other people of marginalized genders have created to sustain themselves.
HF:泭The collections first poem ends with the single word magic; the last poem in泭Smaller Songs泭ends with the phrase alive to myself. Throughout the collection, it seems that magic has much to do with observation, and in turn that observation has much to do with being alive to oneself. What kinds of observations do you hope your readers will draw from this collection?
ALPB:泭I hope the book proposes, or reminds of, the right to be alive to oneselfto live and thrive in cultures that may not consistently affirm our agency. The people whose lives (real or imagined) made it into traditional ballads were constrained by ideas about gender and class and raceand often magic, or something like it, is there to remind us that there is more at work in the world than those structures.
HF: Who is the speaker of these poems? Is there more than one?
ALPB: Me, sometimes; sometimes maybe its the voice of the ballads talking to me. Or me giving advice to myself. The speakers are steeped in the world of the old ballads, but not constrained by that world; theyre able to reinvent it.
HF:泭Why did you choose the poem Manage cheerfully, from Songs of the Garden, to set to music?
ALPB: My partner, Allen Phillips Bell, and I chose it togetherhe wrote the music. The poem worked well metrically for a song, and we liked the symmetry of the four lines. And it was lighter in tone than some of the other poems we considered. He wrote a harmony line for it too, and when we sing it together I keep time with a kids rhythm instrument thats basically jingle bells on a stick. It seems appropriate for the songs marrying of solemnity and, well, cheer.
HF:泭泭Do you have a favorite revision strategy?泭
ALPB:泭I like having all the revisions of a poem printed out, held together with a paper clip or a binder clip; I print out each version after Ive revised it. If I try to revise on screen only, my hands and the machine move faster than my brain and I lose things. I used to type each draft on my Smith-Corona Silent; I still like to do that, especially for early versions. Its important to let the lines live in the physical world.
HF:泭What are you working on now?
ALPB:泭Im working on a collection that includes poems in support of plant communities, as well as notes to self on labor and rest, living in a time of climate crisis, and inhabiting a female body. Im also in the process of revising and expanding a portable craft guide,泭A Pocket Book of Forms.
HF:泭What advice would you offer to students interested in creative writing?
ALPB:泭Make stuff! Make lots of stuff. Also, be rigorous about learning elements of craftfor poetry, fixed forms old and new, meter, strategies for enjambment. Find ways to interact with older texts that allow you to do something new with them. Be kind to your workespecially when its new, dont treat it harshly. And later, be kind by being clear and thorough and wildly enthusiastic about revision. But mostly, make room in your life for the pleasure of making poems, and of reading lots of other peoples.
泭is the author of泭Ornament, winner of the Vassar Miller Poetry Prize, and the chapbook泭Smaller Songs, from St. Brigid Press. Her artists books, including泭A Pocket Book of Forms, a travel-sized guide to prosody, have been selected for exhibitions at Abecedarian Gallery and Asheville Bookworks. The recipient of a North Carolina Arts Council Fellowship in literature, and the winner of the 2021 Winter Anthology Contest, she teaches in the creative writing department at UNC Wilmington and is the editor of泭Ecotone.泭
Hope Fischbach泭is a fifth grade teacher and freelance writer based in Corpus Christi, Texas. She holds a BA in English and Spanish from Lee University in Cleveland, Tennessee. Her work has appeared in泭Grist,泭Whale Road Review,泭Cleaver Magazine, 30 North Literary Review,泭EcoTheo Review, and elsewhere.